Sunday, May 30, 2010

Moral Strength For Human Needs - For All The People Living In Peace

Imagine if we had decided after 9/11 to wean ourselves off oil and other carbon-based fuels. We'd be almost ten years into that project by now.

Imagine if George W. Bush had somehow been able to summon the moral strength of Mahatma Gandhi, Helen Keller, or Martin Luther King Jr, and committed the American people to the pursuit of a common goal of a transformed society, a society which meets our own human needs rather than declaring "war" on an emotion, or, as John Quincy Adams put it, going "abroad, in search of monsters to destroy".

Imagine.

Imagine that we chose not to enslave ourselves to a massive military state whose stated goal is "stability" in countries that never have been "stable", and never will be.

Imagine.

"Imagine all the people, living life in peace."

Sign up to end these wars.


On May 30, 2010, at 10:06 a.m, the direct cost of occupying Iraq and Afghanistan will hit $1 trillion. And in a few weeks, the House of Representatives will be asked to vote for $33 billion of additional "emergency" supplemental spending to continue the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. There will be the pretense of debate - speeches on the floor of both chambers, stern requests for timetables or metrics or benchmarks - but this war money will get tossed in the wood chipper without difficulty, requested by a President who ran on an anti-war platform. Passing this legislation will mark the breaking of another promise to America, the promise that all war spending would be done through the regular budget process. Not through an off-budget swipe of our Chinese credit card.

The war money could be used for schools, bridges, or paying everyone's mortgage payments for a whole year. It could be used to end federal income taxes on every American's first $35,000 of income, as my bill, the War Is Making You Poor Act, does. It could be used to close the yawning deficit, supply health care to the unemployed, or for any other human and humane purpose.

Instead, it will be used for war. Because, as Orwell predicted in 1984, we've reached the point where everyone thinks that we've always been at war with Eastasia. Why?

Not because Al Qaeda was sheltered in Iraq. It wasn't. And not because Al Qaeda is in Afghanistan. It isn't. Bush could never explain why we went to war in Iraq, and Obama can't explain why we are 'escalating' in Afghanistan.

So, why? Why spend $1 trillion on a long, bloody nine-year campaign with no justifiable purpose?
Remember 9/11, the day that changed everything? That was almost a decade ago. Bush's response was to mire us in two bloody wars, wars in which we are still stuck today. Why?
I can't answer that question. But I do have an alternative vision of how the last 10 years could have played out.

Imagine if we had decided after 9/11 to wean ourselves off oil and other carbon-based fuels. We'd be almost ten years into that project by now.

Imagine if George W. Bush had somehow been able to summon the moral strength of Mahatma Gandhi, Helen Keller, or Martin Luther King Jr, and committed the American people to the pursuit of a common goal of a transformed society, a society which meets our own human needs rather than declaring "war" on an emotion, or, as John Quincy Adams put it, going "abroad, in search of monsters to destroy".

Imagine.

Imagine that we chose not to enslave ourselves to a massive military state whose stated goal is "stability" in countries that never have been "stable", and never will be.

Imagine.

"Imagine all the people, living life in peace."
 
Sign up to end these wars.

Alan


Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World


Friday, May 28, 2010

Cities Throughout The World Becoming "Compassionate Cities"


http://archives.subscribermail.com/msg/8f509548c72c462eb31e8142e59d9a18.htm

Compassionate Seattle – On April 24, The City of Seattle became America’s first official “Compassionate City,” by affirming the Charter for Compassion. The Compassionate Action Network supported this effort and has launched a 10-year compassionate cities initiative. In honor of the achievement, Seattle held festival of compassion, which Karen Armstrong keynoted.

See the video of Karen Armstrong In Seattle becoming a city of Compassion
http://my.compassionateactionnetwork.com/video/karen-armstrong-interview-by

Here is the Charter for Compassion
http://charterforcompassion.org/

The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves. Compassion impels us to work tirelessly to alleviate the suffering of our fellow creatures, to dethrone ourselves from the centre of our world and put another there, and to honor the inviolable sanctity of every single human being, treating everybody, without exception, with absolute justice, equity and respect.

It is also necessary in both public and private life to refrain consistently and empathically from inflicting pain. To act or speak violently out of spite, chauvinism, or self-interest, to impoverish, exploit or deny basic rights to anybody, and to incite hatred by denigrating others—even our enemies—is a denial of our common humanity. We acknowledge that we have failed to live compassionately and that some have even increased the sum of human misery in the name of religion.

We therefore call upon all men and women ~ to restore compassion to the center of morality and religion ~ to return to the ancient principle that any interpretation of scripture that breeds violence, hatred or disdain is illegitimate ~ to ensure that youth are given accurate and respectful information about other traditions, religions and cultures ~ to encourage a positive appreciation of cultural and religious diversity ~ to cultivate an informed empathy with the suffering of all human beings—even those regarded as enemies.

We urgently need to make compassion a clear, luminous and dynamic force in our polarized world. Rooted in a principled determination to transcend selfishness, compassion can break down political, dogmatic, ideological and religious boundaries. Born of our deep interdependence, compassion is essential to human relationships and to a fulfilled humanity. It is the path to enlightenment, and indispensible to the creation of a just economy and a peaceful global community.





Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World

Monday, May 10, 2010

Watch Maude Barlow's talk the water of Earth

Watch Maude Barlow's talk the water of Earth:
http://blip.tv/file/3273836/

Maude Barlow educates people all over the world about the crisis of water privatization, and documents how commodification of water results in soaring rate increases and severe water shortages. She says, "Life requires access to clean water; to deny the right to water is to deny the right to life." In her work she particularly advocates for the world's poor, who in some cases pay more for potable water than do wealthier people in the same communities. She travels and lectures widely, arguing that water is a basic right and should not be a commodity.

Ms. Barlow is the National Chairperson of The Council of Canadians, Canada's largest citizen's advocacy organization with over 100,000 members. She is also founder of the Blue Planet Project, which works to stop commodification of the world's water. She is also a Director with the International Forum on Globalization, a San Francisco based research and education institution opposed to economic globalization. Ms. Barlow is the recipient of numerous educational awards and has received honorary doctorates from four Canadian universities for her social justice work. She is the best-selling author or co-author of fourteen books. Her most recent publications are Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and The Coming Battle for the Right to Water, Blue Gold, The Fight to Stop Corporate Theft of the World's Water (with Tony Clarke), now published in 40 countries; Profit is Not the Cure, A Citizens' Guide to Saving Medicare; Making the Links: A Peoples' Guide to the WTO and the FTAA (with Tony Clarke); and The Canada We Want: A Citizen's Alternative to Deep Integration.

She was awarded a Lannan Cultural Freedom Fellowship in 2005. Ms. Barlow resides in Ottawa, Ontario.

You may learn more about this and other events on the Lannan website.




Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World

Friday, May 7, 2010

UN Secretary General to Meet with Maude Barlow

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 7, 2010
10:01 AM

CONTACT: Council of Canadians
Dylan Penner, Media Officer,
613-795-8685, dpenner@canadians.org

UN Secretary General to Meet with Maude Barlow today

http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2010/05/07-2

OTTAWA, Ontario - May 7 - Today, Council of Canadians National Chairperson Maude Barlow is part of an international social movement delegation having an historic meeting with the Secretary General of the United Nations to discuss climate justice and the rights of Mother Earth. The government of Bolivia organized the meeting of 12 delegates from around the world, who will also meet with the G77 and China.

The delegation will focus on the conclusions of last month’s international conference on climate change in Bolivia.

“The message from social movements and governments in Cochabamba was loud and clear that we need urgent climate action that respects the rights of Mother Earth. I look forward to discussing these issues with the UN Secretary General today,” says Maude Barlow.

The World Peoples’ Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in Cochabamba anticipated 8,000 participants. Instead an estimated 30,000 participants from nearly 150 countries and official representation from 48 governments were present at the historic event. “It is shameful that the Canadian government was not an active participant in the conference,” adds Barlow. “Our government’s climate policy continues to be driven more by interests in the tar sands, than advancing climate justice” adds Barlow.

“The People’s Agreement that emerged from the conference, and is now the basis of an official submission by the Bolivian government under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change,  advances an agenda led by civil society organizations working with governments,” says Andrea Harden-Donahue, Climate Justice Campaigner with the Council of Canadians.
The Agreement includes proposals for a global referendum on climate change, setting up an international climate justice tribunal and establishing a Universal Declaration on the Rights of Mother Earth. It advocates climate debt repayment from the global North to the global South including much deeper domestic emission reductions and equitable climate financing.

The Council of Canadians is honored to be involved in promoting the outcomes of the conference as well as the critical concept of protecting the rights of Mother Earth.



Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World

Navajo Youth in Bolivia: Climate Change Worthy Cause

Navajo Youth in Bolivia: Climate Change Worthy Cause to Fight For

Photo: Courtesy photo Michelle Cook

Bolivian President Evo Morales is at the United Nations today in New York, presenting the results of the World Peoples Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth. President Morales invited Tom Goldtooth, executive director of the Indigenous Environmental Network, and a key organizer in Bolivia, to join the delegation at the United Nations.

Meanwhile, in New Zealand, Navajo youth Michelle Cook reflects on the World Climate Conference in Bolivia and the power of this gathering to transform the world and halt the destruction of the earth.

"I walk away realizing how great the responsibility is for youth and how blessed we are to have a cause worthy to fight for," Cook said in her reflections today.

Cook, Navajo Fulbright scholar, arrived in Bolivia for the World Climate Conference from Maori territory in New Zealand. At the conference, she was a member of a grassroots delegation of Native Americans, including Western Shoshone, Navajo, Yaqui, Mohawk, Oneida and others, who struggled to get to Bolivia at all costs. In her case, the long international flight from Auckland, New Zealand, meant an overnight in Chile. In Bolivia, she joined Native Americans from across North America, including Acoma Pueblo, Gwich'in, Lakota, Dakota and delegations of Alaskan Natives and First Nations.

Cook, a graduate of the University of Arizona in Indigenous and Women's studies, has served as a border rights activist in Arizona and in solidarity with the Zapatistas. Earlier, she served as a cultural youth ambassador to Iran. Her reflections offer a rallying call for Indigenous youths.

By Michelle Cook

The World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in Cochabamba, Bolivia, could not have come at a more desperate time. For Navajo people the impacts of climate change become more acute in every passing season through record winds, record snowfall, and drought. Shifts in weather can also be observed in desertification of Navajo territory, in dust storms and the movement of sand dunes.
Navajo people are earth peoples whose bodies and traditional ways of life tie directly to mother earth and the natural environment through medicine, song, performance, and ancestry. Therefore any climatic changes, within the environment and weather impacts not only the Navajo people's culture, and ceremonial cycles, but also our holistic health, and our future survival as an indigenous nation. Other nations and peoples are also feeling the impacts of climate change. Bolivian peoples for example rely on glaciers as their main source of water. The melting of glacier ice, which is directly tied to climate change and the warming of the atmosphere, threatens their access to water, their life, impacting their very ability to exist and survive.
The conference in Cochabamba provided a space where the harsh realities of climate change could be discussed; a place to hear the testimonies of peoples impacted by climate change and a place to envision change, mobilization, and action.
It was beautiful to see the youth working on behalf of their people and the earth; carrying the responsibility, the weight of the world, with gratitude and smiles. For me, the silver lining on the dark clouds of climate change and uncertainty were the youth. The silver lining was their hope and potential, and their determination to combat climate change and fight for our collective survival and well being.

The stand taken by the North American delegation to speak against ineffective state and corporate remedies to climate change such as the carbon credit market, bio-fuels such as ethanol and oil palm plantations, nuclear power, hydro-electric dams, and specifically the REDD platform (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) should also be acknowledged.
I left Cochabamba wondering what role tribal nations and peoples in the global North in "developed nations" play in mitigating and preventing climate change, particularly, for developing tribal nations of the north and elsewhere who have become dependent on a fossil fuel economy.

The Navajo Nation government and economy is tied up in natural resource extraction and has been since its inception. How will indigenous nations and peoples be accountable for carbon emissions within a potential climate justice tribunal? Will indigenous nations of the north be equally tried and accountable for their carbon debt and harmful ecological acts or omissions like other states and non-state actors? Ultimately, indigenous peoples like all peoples have the rights to development, however it has yet to be determined or concluded to what extent this power can or should be exercised in the context of indigenous peoples right to development.
I walk away with knowledge and affirmed intuition that it is a time of great change and a great responsibility for all people. I walk away realizing how great the responsibility is for youth and how blessed we are to have a cause worthy to fight for.



Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

[GMW #1954] Replacing Megacities And Depleted Rural Areas With Human Scale Cities And Towns Nurturing A Better And Happier World



[GMW #1954] Replacing Megacities And Depleted Rural Areas With Human Scale Cities And Towns Nurturing A Better And Happier World
Thursday 6 May 2010, Editor: Easy
| RobertMuller.org | Contact | Subscribe | Unsubscribe |
Biography | World Core Curriculum | Store | Facebook | Twitter
| GMW Blogs: English | Portuguese | Spanish | Tagalog | Dutch |

Idea Dream - Robert Muller's Ideas 1 to 500

~ Idea 330 ~    5 June 1995

The phenomenon of megacities growing ceaselessly in the world accompanied by the human depletion of rural areas is of such frightening magnitude and negative effects on human progress that the UN Office of Human Settlements (Habitat) should be made a full UN specialized agency with a tripartite representation like the International Labour Organization, namely governments, business (builders, architects, etc.) and habitants.

Robert's The Miracle, Joy and Art of Living,  
Volume II Chapter 14 - Of Writing
The most rewarding books are those which render others happy.  Humans are much too precious to be only entertained.

UN News Sources - UN Chronicle, United Nations News Service , UN Wire News Archive
References: Earth Charter, Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Rights of: Children, Women, Indigenous People
To Be Written: Rights of Nature, Birds, Animals, Fish, etc.

Once you replace negative thoughts with positive ones, you'll start having positive results. --Willie Nelson

When I worked in a busy office, most of my co-workers kept jars of candy on their desks to enjoy and share with others. Constantly battling the "bulge," I hated these temptations, but nevertheless often gave in to them.

Finally, I decided to put out a jar of my own "feel good" stuff, with no calories. I bought a beautiful jar and spent one whole weekend at home cutting up colorful strips of paper and writing inspiring quotes on them.

I filled the jar with quotes and placed it on my desk for people to help themselves to. It took a while to catch on, but soon, everyone was stopping by for my "food for thought" jar to fill up on something much better than empty calories! [ more ]

Books recommended by Robert are here.
Other newsletters by GMW's editor can be viewed and subscribed to here.

Subscribe to or unsubscribe from GoodMorningWorld.org

Robert's Harmonic & Talk
Ode To Joy
Never Give Up (Audio Talk)

Decide to - poems
Decide To Index
Decide To Poems


Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Chokeberry extract found to stop weight gain, regulate blood glucose and halt inflammation

Chokeberry extract found to stop weight gain, regulate blood glucose and halt inflammation

Monday, May 03, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor
See all articles by this author
Email this author

http://www.naturalnews.com/028701_chokeberry_weight_gain.html

(NaturalNews) Native Americans have traditionally used dried chokeberries that grow in eastern deciduous forests of the U.S. to make teas. The plants are also used as landscape plantings throughout much of the country and a variety of birds like to feast on the bright red and dark purple fruits from chokeberry bushes. Now it turns out the plant, known by the botanical name Aronia, could be an important source of health benefits --- including a natural way to fight the battle of the bulge.

New research shows chokeberries have unusually high levels of substances called anthocyanins (from the Greek words antho and kyanos meaning dark blue) that are powerful antioxidants. These natural phytochemicals may protect the body from exposure to pollution and metabolically-derived free radicals. What's more, chokeberry anthocyanins appear to have potent anti-inflammatory properties that improve blood sugar and the function of insulin and also halt excessive weight gain.

Those are the conclusions of Drs. Bolin Qin and Richard Anderson from the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Beltsville, Maryland, who studied prediabetic rats that were fed chokeberry extract for an extended period of time. Their research findings were recently presented at the Experimental Biology 2010 meeting held in Anaheim, California, in April as part of the scientific program of the American Society for Nutrition.

The researchers first induced a "prediabetic" condition in 18 male rats by feeding them a fructose-rich diet for 6 weeks. Then they gave half of the animals pure drinking water while the others drank water containing high levels of chokeberry extract. After six weeks, the two groups of lab rats were compared to check for changes in body weight, body fat, blood glucose regulation, and molecular markers for inflammation.

The results showed the rats who drank the chokeberry-spiked water weighed less than the controls. They also had less body fat (specifically, they had less fat in the lower abdominal region), lower blood glucose and reduced levels of plasma triglycerides, cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein (LDL, also known as "bad" cholesterol) when compared to the control animals.

Although human studies are needed, the animal research suggests chokeberry extract could lead to naturally-derived therapies that aid weight control and also lower the risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease in people. It might also reduce chronic inflammation and perhaps even lower cancer risk, according to a media statement by the scientists. They pointed out that in the animals experiment, drinking chokeberry extract lowered expression of the gene coding for interleukin-6 (IL-6), a protein that normally triggers inflammation following trauma or infection and that is thought to play a role in the development of a host of human diseases -- including cancer, diabetes, arthritis, and atherosclerosis.

Editor's note: NaturalNews is opposed to the use of animals in medical experiments that expose them to harm. We present these findings in protest of the way in which they were acquired.

For more information:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_relea...

Labels:
--

Subscribe to periodic newsletter emails from:
- Better World News
- Learning News: children learning, how mind works
- Health News
- Good Morning World - Robert & Barbara Muller's daily idea-dream for a better world

or send a request for a subscription to any of these lists here.

View these newsletters:
Better World  Learning   Health   Good Morning World